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DAILY ENQUIRER • SUN : COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 14, Ixsfi.
mafir"™-T
m
A Man Who Affects the Cleveland Code
of Etiquotto.
■•for Urir. Holds that (ho I'rrsMieit I* So I’ol-
illclui. While Hour; Ooorgi'In n Bale Fi‘l.
low. Full of Itloati—Vlrw* of o Trafllfkor in Fui-
on* Who Owes IIIn All to I'rotertiou,
Galli in Cincinnati Knf|i]iror.
Nbw York, November 10.—Strollinq I
out to-day, I seemed to run against every
body. One of the city judfres met me and
Raid: “Have you paid any attention to i
Mie shoot iau of Bcattlq, the surveyor of
the port? lie has been carrying; things i
with a high hand in that office, ailecting
the bad manners of Grover Cleveland.
Several of the inspectors there are old I
soldiers, some of them as iilqh as brigadier
generals. ‘Good morning, .Mr. Surveyor,’
says one coming in. Beattie growls at
him and says: ‘None of that nonsense; go |
to your duty.’ A merchant conies in and j
says: 'Mr. Surveyor, I called to pay my
respects to you, sir.’ 'What business have
you got?’ says Beattie. ‘If you have any
Dusiness here transact it, and don’t
take up my time.’ This is the Grover
Cleveland code of etiquette.”
Said I: “Who is tins Beattie any how?”
“Nobody knows.”
So I ran upon Mayor Graoe in a few min
utes and congratulated him that he had
not run for mayor last time. Said I, “Who
is Beattie, the surveyor?”
“Benttie is a good man, hut I fancy he is
a little rough. He was Mr. Whitney’s
stenographer, and Whitney thought the
office important enough to put in it a man
he could understand. Beattie at one time
edited a republican newspaper on Staten
island. 1 think he is a Scotchman. 1
judge that there
MAY UK SOME EXAGGERATION
about tlie stories of his brusqueness,
tbougb I suppose be could be pretty rough
if he tried. He is not inuen of a Cleve
land man, however.”
Said I: “Mr. Mayor, do you think that
Cleveland is going to be nominated with
out opposition next time?”
liave been a Cleveland man through
“I
thick and thin," said the mayor, without
answering my question. “I am free to say
that Mr. Cleveland is a very poor politi
cian. I have been a Cleveland man be
cause my sensibilities have been greatly
moved toward the president.”
“What do you think about the Henry
George labor movement? ”
“Well, it is going; to be, probably, a very
important factor in the next government
of the United States. You see, we elect on
the same day in 1888 the president of the
United States, governor of New York and
mayor of New York city. There is a com
bination worthy of the attention of a very
profound politician. Those different in
terests aggregate so much that it is
ONE OF THE FINEST PRIZES
politicians ever had to divide on the ordi
nary issue of an election. I would not bo
surprised if the labor men held together to
Bee them throw the scale one way or the
other.”
“Do you know Henry Goorge person
ally, Mr. Gruce ?”
“Yes; he is a first-rate fellow. He is a
smart fellow, too. You ought to meet
him ; his head is full of ideas.’’
“What do you think about Hewitt as
your successor in the mayor’s office?”
“He is a patriotic man", and a very solid
man — a learned man,” concluded the
mayor, looking grave.
I turned into a big drug house down
town, where they make paint, putty, and
everything by the ship load, and asked
Lockwood take that office of district at
torney for?”
“Why, he wanted an office of some kind;
lie expected something a great deal bet
ter, but it was rather a necessity for him
' io lake some office. He married a fortune
J and his wife thought he ought to he in nil
! official place.”
Another person spoke up and said : “If
! you want to meet Dan I will bring him
j over here. If he Is in a good mood he will
I just, give old Cleveland hell. He don't like
I him worth a cent.”
The conversation drifted on until I said
to Mr. Adams, a member of the present
congress: “The last time 1 saw you you
were very earnest for civil service re
form.”
“I do think it a good principle,” said
Mr. Adams, “but the president has done
: himself no good with it from his errors of
| policy in handling it.”
“Do you think Cleveland is going to
have a walk over for the next preslil.m
cy?”
“No, I do not. 1 don’t see how lie can
possibly get tlie vote of Now York state in
the convention. You take tlie situation
in this city since Cleveland was elected I
president, and it shows that as a party we I
arc
RATHER WORSE OFF
from having him in the presidential chair
than without him. If there ever was a
man who saeiifleed men, friends, policy
and opportunities, it is Mr. Cleveland.
He has now worked himself up into a high
dudgeon on account of some fancied hos
tility, whereas he is his only opponent. I
maintain,” said Mr. Adams, “that there is
not one member of the New York delega
tion in congress from the city of New
York who will support Cleveland, unless
it be Sam Cox, and there is not much re
lying on Sam Cox anyhow. Leave him
out, and tlie delegation is opposed to him.
Even Tim Ci mpbell, who started in a hot
Cleveland man, has given him up.”
Coughs and Colds. Those who are suffer
ing from Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, etc.,
should try Brown’s Bronchial Troches.
Sold only in boxes. th sat se tu*w
InmorUlltf.
Thero is a. bird that mariners call the
“ frigate bird,” of strange habits and of
stranger power. Men see him in all climes;
but never yet has human eye seen him
near the earth. With wings of mighty
stretch, high borne, he sails along. Men
of the iar north see him at midnight mov
ing on amid auroral fires, sailing along
with sot wings amid those awful flames,
taking the color of the waves of light
which swell and heave around him. Men
in the tropics see him at hottest noon, his
plumage all incarnadined by the fierce
rays that smite innocuous upon him. Amid
their ardent fervor he bears along, majes
tic, tireless. Never was he known to stoop
from his lofty line of flight, never to
swerve. To many he is a myth; to all a
mystery. Where is his perch? Where
does he rest ? Where was he brooded ?
None know. They only know that above
cloud, above the reach of temptest, above
the tumult of transverse cu. rents, this
bird of Heaven, so let us cull him, on self-
supporting vans that disdain to beat the
air on which they rest, moves grandly on.
So shall my hope be. At either pole of
life, above the clouds of sorrow, superior
to the tempests that beat upon me, on lof
ty and tireless wing, scorning the earth, it
shall move along. Never shall it stoop,
never swerve from its sublime line of
flight. Men Bhall see it in the morning of
my lifo; they shall see it in its hot noon
day; and when the shadows Bhall fall, the
sun having set. the last they shall see of
me shall he this hope of gain in dying, as
it sails out on steady wing, and disappears
amid the everlasting light.
oryt _ . . .
Mr. Leaver Page, who is prominent in the
board of education, what he thought about
the labor issue. He said :
“Weil, it is a very grave thing. 1 sup
pose there must he some equity and right
where there is so much discontent. The
American people are brave enough and
just enough to inquire into the origin of
any evils which are unnatural, and which
can be cured.”
“Are you a Blaine man, Mr. Page?”
“Yes, 1 should vote for Mr. Blaine again
with the greatest satisfaction. I told him
sometime ago hosv the tariff interest,
which ho advocates, had benefited us and
our workmen. A little over ten years ago
nearly all the artists' colors used for oil-
painting, etc., were imported from ism-
don. They had been so imported from tlie
very foundation of our country. The
brushes, tubes for containing the colors,
etc., were all made outside of the United
States. We discovered in the tariff suffi
cient protection to embark in that branch
of the business, and now we make in
this one establishment in the city of New
York more brushes, colors, etc., than tlie
entire importation from Great Britain,
employiu a very large line of hands ana
rendering it next to impossible for this
trade ever to be taken from the United
Slates. These little metallic coses for the
color, you see, we make by a single act of
energy of a machine; the metal is driven
home like a nail and comes out a metallic
bottle.”
IN THE NEXT CONGRESS.
In a few minuter J ran upon Bourkc
Coekran ard his colleague m the next
congress. Mr. Brice. Brice, it seems, is the
son-in-law of Edward Cooper. Coekran
had on a new overcoat, and looked like a
satisfied and prosperous man; ho is a young
fellow, perehaps thirty-live or forty years
old, and with a large chest, stomach and
face. Said I: “Don’t you think that
there will be some more opposition to
Cleveland publicly in the next congress
than in this one?"
“1 have heard that remarked,” said Mr.
Coekran, knowingly; “certainly the dem
ocratic party lias not that degree of unity
and cordiality it might expect after such a
victory as we had two years ago.”
“ALL NONSENSE.”
The next parties 1 met were Smith M.
Weed, democrat, and Prank Hiseock, re
publican, tlie latter just elected from the
Syracuse district. Hiseock was mysteri
ous and uncommunicative, hut finally ex
pressed himself on the Henry George
movement by saying thul it was all non
sense. He said that il would go to pieces
in 4 very little while from tlie inherent
absurdity of its propositions. Smith Weed
said that il had time to go to pieces and
form again and lie pretty active for tlie
next election. Hiseock took up George’s
proposition to tax the land without the
buildings upon the laud. “Now,” said he, ...
“that is infernal nonsense; how are the !,f\jt,Li U !,!L, n ;!! f
farmers in the interior of the country
going to hear of any such scheme? In a
very densely populated country like Eng
land, where the land takes an artificial
value through the aristocracy, etc., it
might do to raise the taxes upon the
ground; where there is a regular and es
tablished rental value of the land this
might be done. Butin tlie United States,
where there is no known or recognized
rental value, where everything depends
upon something contingent or accidental,
you can’t collect your taxes out of the
ground and overlook the value of the im
provements and buildings.”
ROSWELL P. FLOWER’S SUCCESSOR.
In a few minutes 1 fell in with Mr. Gib
bons, who had been appointed that
same day commissioner to lay the under
ground telegraph wires by the governor in
place of lloswell P. Flower. Mr. Gibbous
is well known throughout the country as
Mr. Flower’s political factor. He is a
young man, rather a collegian in*appear-
ance, with good breeding and communicn-
Ely’s Cream Balm has completely cured
mo of a long otanding case of catarrh. I
have never yet soon its equal os a cure for
colds in the head and headache resulting
from such colds. It is a remedy of sterling
morit.—Ed. L. Crossly, Nashville, Tenn.
eod&w
Why It Ik Overlooked,
Indignant Citizen—“Uncle Sam, do you
know' that smuggling is carried on by our
naval vessels?”
Uncle Sam—“Yes, I’ve heard about it.”
“Why don’t don’t you do something
about it?”
“Oh! the navy can’t do any smuggling
worth mentioning. It isn’t big enough.”
—Omaha World.
I find Ely’s Cream Balm good for catarrh
of longstanding. — M. F. Lasley, 11)34 West
Chestnut St., Lousville, Ky. eod&w
IVhutH Wife Ought to Know.
Contemporary Review.
Very few men have the time or the pa
tience to make a shilling go as far as it can
—women have. Especially a woman whose
one thought is to save her luisliund from
having burdens greater than he can hear;
to help him by that quiet carefulness in
money matters which alone gives an easy
mind and a real enjoyment of life; to take
care of the pennies, in short, that ho may
have the pounds free for all his lawful
needs, and lawful pleasures, too. Surely
there can be no sharper pang to a loving
wife than lo see her husband staggering
under the weight of family life; worked
almost to death in order to dodge “tlie
wolf at the door;” joyless in the present,
terrified at the future; and yet all this
might have been averted if the wife had
known the value and use of money, and
been able to keep what her husband earn
ed; to “cut her coat according to her
cloth,” for any income is limited unless
you can teach yourself to live within it; to
“waste not,” and therefore to “want not.”
But this is not always the woman’s fault.
Many men insist blindly on a style of liv
ing which their means ivill not allow; and
many a wife has been cruelly blamed for
living at a rate of expenditure unwarrant
ed by tier husband's means, nmi which his
pecuniary condition made absolutely dis
honest, had she known it. But site did
not know it, lie being too careless or too
cowardly to lell her, and she had not the
sense to inquire or to find out. Every mis
tress of a household especially every
mother ought to find out what tlie family
income is, and where it comes from, and
thereby prevent all needless extravagance.
Half the miserable or disgraceful bank
ruptcies never would lhappon if the wives
hud th*' sense and courage to stand firm
and insist on knowing enough about the
family income to expend it proportionate
ly; to restrain, as every wife should, a too
lavish husband; or foiling that, to slop her
self out of nil luxuries which she cannot
Above all, to bring up
her children in a tender carefulness that
refuses to mulct “ the governor” out of one
unnecessary half-penny, or to waste the
money he works so hard for in their own
thoughtless amusements.
A BULLET THROUGH ni8 BRAIN,
and the case was consequently dismissed
forthwith by Hon. R. L. Davis, the presid
ing judge. This was the third trial for
divorce between tlie ill-mated couple.
They were married many years ago, but
on account of liis had h tbits and fondness
for the flowing bowl, his wife left him
and procured a divorce. After the lapse
of a few years McGorman renewed his
courtship, and, under persistent promises
of future good behavior, his divorced wife
was induced to marry him again. The
couple got along well together for a few
months, but the husband retimed to his
old ways, and treated his wife with ex
treme cruelty. His conduct, was unbeara
ble, and for the second time she went into
court and procured a divorce. The twice
legally separated couple did not seem able
to exist apart, at least he did not, and in
less than a year lie was again playing the
part of a lover and beseeching his former
| wife to restore him to her heart. His third
! suit was not in vain, and
WITH WONDROUS FORGIVENESS
the woman was married the third lime-
united to a drunken husband. Far from
appreciating her Indulgence, he became
more abusive and drunken than ever.
Mrs. McGorman endured it as long as she
could, and in self-defense was forced to in
voke the uid of the law to take her from
McGorman’s clutches.
While the third trial was in progress it
terminated in the trugie manner indicated.
The suicide was 07 years of age, and his
wife several years his junior.
The affair lias caused considerable ex
citement in the little Hoosier town, where
both were well known.
Moxie will give you a v.gorous appetite
and refreshing sleep.
Troubled lij Corset*.
I am told by an eavesdropper that a
prominent actor recently in St. Paul had a
row with his leading lady, and all on ac
count of her corsets. In one of the acts
there was a spirited love scene, during
which it was necessary for her to fall into
his arms and be gracefully embraced. He
insisted that this embrace could not bean
artistic effort on his part if she wore her
corsets. She protested and shed tears at
the hare thought, but he won with the ro-
mark: “Corsets have their place, but a
man, no less an actor, cannot enter into
spirit of an embrace nor clasp the form
divine with any degree of skill if at the
same time he must take in the barrier of
corsets.” That settled it, and the embrace
was an artistic success.—St. Paul Pioneer
Press.
Mothers worn out with the oare. of ma
ternity should take Moxie.
MELLIN’S FOOD, the only perfect sub
stitute for mothers’ milk, is recommended
by our most prominent physicians as the
best and safest food for infants. It con
tains no farinaceous matter, which so
often produces disorders of the stomach.
novlO tu th sat&wlm
In the misfortunes of others it is good to
learn what must be avoided.
Immnrtslltr*
The fool asks; “With what flesh? In joy or pain?
Helped or unhelp rt? ami lonely? or again
Surrounded by our earthly friends?”
I know not; and I glory that I do
Not know; that for eternity’s great ends
God counted me us worthy of such trust
That I nee 1 not bo told.
I hold
Thai if it be
Less than enough for any soul to know
Itself immortal, immortality
in all its boundless spaces will not find
A place designed
So small, so low
That to a fitting home such soul can go.
Out to the earthward brink
Of that great tideb s.s sea,
Light from Christ’s garment streams.
1 joy, not that ! ask or choose,
But'siinply that i muRt.
I love and fear not, I cannot lose
One instant this great certainty of peace. •
Long as God ceases not I cannot cease;
I must arise.
-Helen Hunt Jackson.
m
m
!
11 Fill
uL
Mot il) Bit Won Tlmt Way.
Do ynu know you have asked ]for the costliest
thing
Ever made by the Hand above—
A woman’s heart and a woman’s life
And a woman’s wonderful love ?
Do you know you have asked for this priceless
thing
As a child might have asked for a toy—
Demanding what others have died to win
With the reckless dash of a boy?
You have written my lessons of duty out,
Manlike vou have questioned me;
Now stand at the bar of my woman’s soul
Until I nave questioned thee.
You require your dinner should always be hot,
Your socks and your shirts should be whole;
I require vour heart to be true as God’s stars,
And pure as heaven your soul.
I require a far better
A seamstress you’re wanting for stockings and
shirts—
I waut a man and a king.
man that the Maker, God,
Shall look upon us as He did the first,
And say “It’s very good.”
I am fair and young, but the lose will fade
From my soil, young cheek one day ;
Will you love me then 'mid the falling leaves,
As you did ’mid the bloom of May ?
Is your heart an ocean so strong and deep
1 may launch my nil on its tide ?
A loving woman finds heaven or hell
On tlie day she is made a bride.
1 require all tilings that are good and true
All tilings that a man should be;
If you give this all, I would stake my life
To be all you demand of me.
If you cannot do this—a laundress and cook
You can hire with little pay ;
But a woman’s heart and a woman’s life
Are not to be worn that way.
—Mrs. Browning.
Free I rmlc.
The reduction of internal revenue and
the taking off'of revenue stamps from Pro
prietary Medicines, no doubt has largely
benefited the consumers,as well as relieving
Hie burden of home manufacturers. Es
pecially is this the ease with Green’s Au
gust Flower and Boschee’s German Syrup,
as me reduction of thirty-nix cents per
dozen, has been added t'o increase the size
of the bottles containing these remedies,
thereby giving one-fifth more medicine in
the 75 cents size. The August Flower for
Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint, and the
German Syrup for Cough and Lung trou
bles, have perhaps, the largest sale of any
medicines in the world. The advantage of
increased size of the bottles will be greatly
appreciated by the sick and afflicted, iu
every town and village in civilized coun
tries. Sample bottles for 10 cents remain
the same size oct12 rl&wly
Why lie Wuntcil llvr to Sing.
“Mary, suppose you sing something.”
“Oh, it’s too late Churlev. I’m < fraid
it’ll awake every one.”
“That’s too bad!” exclaimed Charley,
with every appearance of distress.
“But why do you want me to sing,
dear?” she tenderly inquired.
“Why, you see,” he replied, “a fellow I
owe five dollars to has been waiting out
side all evening for me, and I thought
maybe if you’d sing lie’dgoaway.”—Pitts
burg Dispatch.
Malaria.
Twenty-five'hundred dozen bottles of
Ague Conqueror ordered in one month. It
positively eradicates all Malaria, Fever
and Ague, Bilious and Intermittent Fevers
in any climate. Read our book of 1000
testimonials.
Due West, S. C„ March 12, 1883.—G. G.
Green, Dear Sir—We will soon need more
Ague Conqueror. It is taking like “hot
cakes” and giving satisfaction.
Yours, Ellis Bros.
Fairfield, Mo., August 29, 1886.—G. G.
Green, Dear Sir—Your Ague Conqueror
knocks the Chills and Dumb Ague every
time. I warrant every bottle and it never
fails. I have cured cases where quinine
had no effect whatever.
the Past, Present or Future
Gray Leads Them All.
act!2 d&wly
Yours truly,
W. H. Shaw & Co.
If She Were Bleh.
In talking to his wife the other day about
the death of Mrs. A. T. Stewart, a gentle
man of this city said: “What would you
do if Mrs. Stewart had left you $1,000,000
in her will?” The lady paused for a mo
ment and then replied: “Well, I wouldn’t
want any more home-made bonnets.”—
Boston Budget.
Advice to Mothers.—Mrs. Winslow’s
Soothing Syrup should always be used
when children are cutting teeth. It re
lieves the little sufferer at once; It produces
natural, quiet sleep by relieving the child
from pain, and the little cherub awakes as
“bright as a button.” It is very pleasant
to taste. It soothes the child, softens the
turns, allays all pain, relieves wind, regu-
ates the bowels and is the best known
remedy for diarrhoea, whether arising
from teething or other causes. Twenty-
five cents a bottle. jel7 d&wly
riicre lVns mi Jie.il til Scold.
An old gentleman in Baltimore who used
to be troubled by young men sitting up
with his daughters until a late hour, set
tled the callers by appearing promptly at
11 o’clock and giving each of them a ticket
to the ten-eent lodging house. He never
scolded or acted iu an emphatic manner,
because there wasn’t any need of it.—
Washington Critic.
ni l! LITHE
la I ST OK MOTT E US.
List of unclaimed letters remaining; in the Co
luinbus, Oa., post office for the week ending Nov-
14. If not. called for within thirty days will be
sent to the Dead Letter Office:
Adams mrs S A R
Allen mrs A
Anderson miss L
Anson mrs J
Avritte L
B.iley nnsT
Hates miss L
bed ell miss L
Beasley mrs A s
Beddingfield L
Belcher E 11
Beard M L
Bird mrs It
Beach miss M J
Bryant mrs M
Bradley C
Brown A .1 col
Brown miss K E
Byron K
Carter W N
Clements W C
Colyar 1)
i (’
tiveneas qualified by discretion. Several
other persons gathered around, and con
versation turned on Grover Cleveland.
“There,” said one, “is Dan Lockwood
now taking his refreshments at that lunch
counter.”
Said I: “What in the world did Dan
Laughter Lends a New ('harm
To beauty when it discloses a pretty set of
teeth. Whiteness, when nature has sup
plied this element of loveliness, may be
retained through life by using fragrant
SOZODONT. sat se tu t-h«&w
FICTION OUTDONE.
• w
Cook nm
ram* inr.'' N
Daniel 11
David L II
Davis D
Dilahay
Doughtu
Fuller J F
I’lemming G G
Freeman M F
Franklin F. J
Freeman \V \
Fuller J F
i tree il.) H sr
Gilbert K
Greenberry R col
Johnson mrs L
J F Halvin Working;
King W C
King miss M
King J W
Kimbrough miss C
Little F
Locket miss B
Love miss A
McCormack mrs
McGougli W
McDonald mrs A
McElvey miss E
McKinney ,1 W
Maulase W
McKrwing (’
Martin J
Miller mrs R
Mitchel M
O Neal mrs J
Badge tt M
Perkins miss T
Parken W
Pearson A
Perry miss M
Perry L col
Perry mrs E
Phillips M
Phillips R
PoughJW
Preston mrs V
Rankins H R
Rawson W W
Redd J
Henthrow .1
Rendles mrs c A s
Reynolds mrs B
Revil W B
Cleansed, Purified and Beautified by the !
Cuticura Remedies.
I T affords me pleasure to give you this report of |
the cure of our little grandchild by your Cuti- j
cura Remedies. When six months old his left
hand began to swell and had every appearance of j
a large boil. We poulticed it, but all to no pur
pose. About five months after it became a run-
ningsore. Soon other sores formed. He then
mid two of them on each hand, and as his blood
became more and more imcured it took less time
for them to bve..k out. A soie came on i a chin,
beneath the under lip, which was very offensive.
His head was one solid scab, discharging a great
deal. This was his condition at tw.nty-hvo
months old, when I undertook the care of him,
his mother having died when lie was a li tie more
than n year old, of consumption scrofula of
course ’ He could walk a little, but could not get
up if he fell down, and could not move when in
bed, having no use of his bands. I immediately
commenced with the Cu icura Remedies, using
the Cuticura and Cuticura Soap freely, and wheu
he had taken one bottle of the Cuticur
very >
improv .
eouraged, and continued the
for a year :md a half. One so
healed, a bony matter forming
id he
cry much en-
of the remedies
e after another
— .... —in each one of
these five deep ones just before healing, which
would finally grow loose and were taken out:
then they would heal rapidly. One of th"se ugly
bone formations I preserved. After taking a doz
en and a half bottles he wa.s completely cured,
and is now. at the age of six yi urs, a strong end
healthy child. The scars on his hands must nl-
lys remain; his hands arc strong, though we
OurEntiieSiore Bristles with Unmatched Bargains
As we have received so many new goods lust week,
'Lwould be impossible tor us to begin to name them, so many
ure they. No chance for any house trying to match our
prices. Power of knowledge is all we ask of the great crowds
that are daily hunting for Gray's.
Good news ah around. A few plain words to thinking
people. Who buys goods cheaper—one that buys for one
house, or the one that buys for half a dozen? Gray, the
Great Cutter of Prices, in order to move his big stock off
quickly, announces for this week his greatest bargain effort-
Dress Goods! Dress Goods!
Our sales have been prodigious this season in this depart
ment. 'Tis our airn to be matched by none. Here you go.
Get your pocket books full to overflowing. All Hamilton,
Manchester and Bosmories Mohairs, in twilled, plain and
brocade, worth from 20c io 35c, every shade, also black; you
can grab at them for 121c.
Cashmeres! Cashmeres!
DBESS C3-OOIDS IJST .A-HSTILTIEIX:.
All our 12ic Goods marked down to 8 cents; see them.
All our 10c Goods marked down to 61 cents ; see them.
All our 8c Goods marked down to 41 cents ; see them.
Dress Goods Again!
TH’S TIME BLACK GOODS AND SILKS-
In great demand, but only from the Leader Gray. Those
beautiful extra wide, heavy, 1800 fine, jet and blue black
Imported Cashmeres, worth 55c, and you get good value; we
still have only a few left at 25 cents a yard. Our daily sales
on this one article is over 75 dresses a day. Don’t ask to see
this after Friday, as till will be gone.
Price our All Silk India in blacks at 75 cents.
Price our All Silk Lupins in blacks at 92 cents.
Price our Ail Silk Lupins in blacks at $1 00.
We keep all grades up to $4.50 a yard.
All our Colored $1.50 Surahs left we will close out at 90c.
The largest stock of Silk Plushes and Velvets in town.
Impotiad Wraps, Impt'd Cloaks, Impt'd Jackets,
In Frieze, Astrakan. Sicilian and Turkmado Wraps and
Jerseys we just beat the town so bad you smile when you
price ours.
All are compelled to say, ‘'Well Guay, your Blankets are
the cheapest iu the city.” And the beauty of it is we find from
our sides in this line they are not going to remain with us.
LADIES AND GENTS' UNDERWEAR.
No use buying Flannel to make them, for in Ladies'Nmd
Gents’ just see us match any $1.00 goods in town for 50c.
ed hi
All that phys
. • he able to i
ians did for him did him
e child before using' the
■re the child now eon
. If the above facts are
:G liberty to usl them.
M RS. : : S. DR
<112 E. Clay St., Bloomiiif
.-Brood.
I was really i
d to hiss: .iu
day, became.
Ro
I)
ell nils
Raser J \V
Robinson mrs M
Relfbrd miss S
Scott C
pared by the Pi
Boh (iH’ai'eXUiii hise;
Sly !
col
itch 1
Slayton miss J
Smith M 2
Smith J W
Small mrs .1
clair W B
Me
Stevens i
. M
' B
A Strange Oeeurren
vurees from the
Third Trial is in
e ait Rising Sun—Three
Same llusbaml—While
’regress He Suicides.
Cincinnati, November 13.— A sensa
tional affair occurred yesterday at Rising
Sun, Ind. A divorce suit in progress iii
that town developed one of the most "re
markable cases on record. Catherine Mc-
Gorman was yesterday in court .seeking a
legal separation from her husband John
McGorman. The trial was in progress and
the last witness was on the stand. Two
boys rushed into the court-room and
breathlessly announced that the defendant
had just committed suicide. An investiga
tion proved that McGorman had sent
Hood mrs C
Horn P M
Hinton miss S
Hughes miss L
Hurt J W
Jackson miss II
Jackson A
Jackson miss C
Jackson miss M
Jackson mrs L
Jackson mrs H
Jackson E B
Jenkins mrs A M
Jenkins miss S
Jennings J col
Johnson 1
Johnson miss B F
Johnson C
Johnson miss L
Johnson mrs C
Jones W
Stephen
St ribling mrs M E
Taylor mrs G
Terry D
Thomas S
Thomas miss A L
Thomas .1
Thomas W A
Tucker mr- L
Tyler miss E
OH! in SlU'li. MV HACK !
Pain. Inflammation and Weakness of
the Kidneys. Hips and Side relieved in
• n inute by the Octicvra Anti-Pain
vstkk. New and Infallible. At drug-
SJgists, 25c. Potter Drug and Chemical
.Boston.
Wall miss W
Ware J T
Walker miss Lcol
Waddail J N
Ward worth mrs J E
Weaver & Co W
Wellborn AI J
Whatley miss M L
Williams M
Williams M G
Wilber F
Willis J P
Winter miss L L
When calling tor these letters, please say the*
are advertised, giving date.
TH08. J. WATT. P. M
y perfect substitute for Mother’*
*"•"52 Invaluable in Cholera Infantum
and Teething. A pre-digested food for Dys
gejjGcSf Consumptives, Convalescents
Perfect nutrient in ail Wasting Diseases
Requires no cooking. Our Book, The Oar*
and Feeding of li.^nts, mailed free.
DOUBBR. GOODALB * OO., Boeton. Meos
ioiir lime is worfli dollars. Ten or fifteen
hese prices will save you ten or fifteen dol-
wei’k our receipts were over 70 per cent larger
corresponding week of 1885. We have tlie records
o show. \\ e most earnestly advise tlie trade to come as early
is convenient Monday and Tuesday, in order that they may
ivoid the big rush, and we will have a better opportunity of
whirl) is our earnest
giving the attention to every customei
desire all should receive.
We forgot to mention a big box of 7c Calicoes wl
winch we
mil for 4 cents.
THE QUICK SELLERS,
ON-TOP-LIVE-HOUSE,
C. P. GRAY & CO.
Opposite Rankin House.
LARGEST BUSINESS CONNECTIONS SOUTH,
COLUMBUS, AUGUSTA, SAVANNAH, NEW Y0BK,*
SPEOIAL.